ÌâÄ¿ÄÚÈÝ

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿

¸ù¾ÝººÓïÒâ˼Íê³É¾ä×Ó£¬Ã¿¿ÕÒ»´Ê

¡¾1¡¿Ò»×ß½ø°ì¹«ÊÒ£¬Ëý¾Í¸Ð¾õµ½ÓÐʲô²»¶Ô¾¢µÄ¡£

_______ _______ into the office, she felt some-thing unusual.

¡¾2¡¿Õæ¿Éϧ£¬ÎÒÃÇÒÔÒ»·ÖÖ®²îÊäµôÁËÄdz¡ÀºÇò±ÈÈü¡£

_______ _______ _______that we lost the basketball match by one goal.

¡¾3¡¿ËùÓÐÕâЩ¾èÖúËƺõ¶¼ÓëÒ»¸ö½ÐÊ·ÃÜ˹µÄÏÈÉúÓйØϵ¡£

It seems that all the donation_______ _______ _______ a gentleman called Smith.

¡¾4¡¿×ö×÷ÒµµÄʱºò£¬½¨ÒéÄã²»ÒªÌýÒôÀÖ»ò¿´µçÊÓ¡£

_______ _______ your homework, you are advised not to listen to music or watch TV.

¡¾5¡¿ËûµÄ¹ÊʺÃÏñÊDZà³öÀ´µÄ£¬ÌýÆðÀ´²»Õæʵ¡£

His story is _______ _______it was made up,_______ _______true.

¡¾6¡¿»ØÏëÆðÕâЩȤÊ£¬ÎÒÃÇÈ̲»×¡´óЦÆðÀ´¡£

When we_______ _______ _______the funny things, we couldn't help laughing.

¡¾7¡¿´óÎíÖÐÁýÕÖ×ŵĽֵÀÉÏ·¢ÉúÁËÒ»Æð½»Í¨Ê¹ʣ¬Ôì³ÉÊ®¸öÈËËÀÍö¡£

A traffic accident happened in the street_______ _______ a thick fog,_______ ten people.

¡¾8¡¿ÔÚº®·çÖеÈÁËÕûÕûÁ½¸öСʱ£¬·ÛË¿ÃÇÈÔÈ»ÈÈÇéºÜ¸ß¡£

_______ _______ _______ in the cold wind for two whole hours, the fans remained in high spirits.

¡¾´ð°¸¡¿¼û½âÎö

¡¾½âÎö¡¿¡¾1¡¿ On going

¡¾2¡¿ It¡¯s a pity

¡¾3¡¿ is associated with

¡¾4¡¿ While doing

¡¾5¡¿ as if, not sounding

¡¾6¡¿looked back on

¡¾7¡¿ covered in, killing

¡¾8¡¿ Though having waited

Á·Ï°²áϵÁдð°¸
Ïà¹ØÌâÄ¿

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿You just think you know what will make you happy. Researchers in the new science of happiness know better. They have evidence that married people on average end up being no happier than they were before the wedding. Winning the lottery (²ÊƱ) will probably reduce your pleasure in ordinary events that used to make you happy. And being in good health isn't as much of a factor as the right genes when it comes to satisfaction.

Soligman and Diener studied 222 Illinois college students to find out what the happiest 10% had in common. It turned out they were extroverts (ÍâÏòµÄÈË), had more friendships and romantic relationships, but didn't exercise more and didn't feel they had more good events in their lives than those who weren't as happy.

Some of the results come as a surprise. A classic study of lottery winners and people with spinal (¼¹¹Ç) cord injuries, for instance, found that neither event changed their lives as much as observers thought they would.

Gilbert is looking into how accurately people predict what will make them happy, which turns out, not accurately at all. What we think will bring us pleasure¡ªa new car, the home team winning the NCAA championship, a move to California¡ªusually doesn't bring us as much as we expected, and the positive impact doesn't last as long. The good news is that we also overestimate the impact of catastrophic (±¯²ÒµÄ) events. Even with data from research pouring in, scientists still don't have an easy answer to what we all want to know: How do I get long-term life satisfaction? The answers they do have are often the same ones that philosophers and priests have been giving us for centuries. It's just nice to have them backed up with hard data.

¡¾1¡¿ What does the passage mainly discuss?

A. A research on happiness.

B. The level of happiness.

C. The secrets of happiness.

D. The prediction of happiness.

¡¾2¡¿ The happiest people have the following characters except that __________.

A. they are rich

B. they are outgoing

C. they are very sociable

D. they don't pay more attention to exercise

¡¾3¡¿ According to the passage, we can know if the hurricane happens, it will cause __________.

A. more suffering than people expect

B. as much suffering as people expect

C. less suffering than people expect

D. nothing is mentioned about it

¡¾4¡¿ Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage?

A. We ourselves know what makes us happy the best.

B. The happiest 10% in the world have nothing in common.

C. People can predict the things that make them happy accurately.

D. We just need to do what the philosophers and priests tell us to keep happy.

Î¥·¨ºÍ²»Á¼ÐÅÏ¢¾Ù±¨µç»°£º027-86699610 ¾Ù±¨ÓÊÏ䣺58377363@163.com

¾«Ó¢¼Ò½ÌÍø